Rehabilitation outcome 5 years after 100 lower-limb amputations
- PMID: 7827880
- DOI: 10.1002/bjs.1800811110
Rehabilitation outcome 5 years after 100 lower-limb amputations
Abstract
Received wisdom commends a policy of maximizing the ratio of below-knee to above-knee amputations in patients with end-stage arterial disease. After adoption of this policy, the long-term outcome of 100 consecutive lower-limb amputations in 96 patients was monitored by annual review for 5 years. The ratio of primary below-knee to above-knee amputations was 2:1, with 9 per cent of below-knee amputations undergoing revision to a higher level. At 2 years after amputation only 26 per cent of patients were successfully walking out of doors, while 40 per cent had died. By 5 years 67 per cent were dead and only 9 per cent continued to walk out of doors with an artificial limb, although a further 8 per cent continued to use the limb within the confines of their own homes. In a previous audit of 193 amputations performed during the 3.5 years to December 1984, stump healing was a problem in 45 per cent of primary below-knee amputations, compared with 25 per cent in the present study. Although the below- to above-knee ratio in 1984 was only 1:2, the overall rehabilitation rate, as determined by the proportion of patients able to walk at 2 years, was 34 per cent. It is concluded that increasing the proportion of below-knee amputations from one-third to two-thirds of lower-limb amputations for occlusive arterial disease does not improve effective rehabilitation rates. Received wisdom on the desirability of a high below- to above-knee ratio may be wrong.
Comment in
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Rehabilitation outcome 5 years after 100 lower limb amputations.Br J Surg. 1995 Apr;82(4):567-8. doi: 10.1002/bjs.1800820446. Br J Surg. 1995. PMID: 7613914 No abstract available.
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